![]() ![]() He wants to do his best to retain everything he has learned throughout his life with his broken family so that he can be the best human he can. However, this is something he accepts because he believes, more than anything else in the world, that he will be reincarnated as a human – a being he has always considered himself, just trapped in a dog’s body. ![]() Within the first few pages, we learn Enzo is about to die. On the contrary, Enzo, the dog, is the narrator and each page grants entrance into his mind. Yes, it had me sobbing so hard I had to put the book down by page five, but it obviously wasn’t because the author was hurting a dog the protagonist had grown to love. ![]() They’re bland, predictable, and exist just to make you tear up. When The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein was handed to me by a coworker, my first thought was, “Oh joy, a dog book.” I’ve never been a fan of stories surrounding dogs. ![]()
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